cat

Concatenate and print (display) the content of files.

Syntax
cat [-benstuv] [-] [file ...]
Options
-b Number the non-blank output lines, starting at 1.
-n Number the output lines, starting at 1.
-s Squeeze multiple adjacent empty lines, causing the output to be
single spaced.
-u Disable output buffering.
-v Displays non-printing characters so they are visible.
Control characters print as `^X' for control-X;
The delete character (octal 0177) prints as `^?'
Non-ascii characters (with the high bit set) are printed as `M-' (for meta)
followed by the character for the low 7 bits.
-e Display non-printing characters and display a dollar sign ($) at the
end of each line.
-t Display non-printing characters and display tab characters as ^I at the
end of each line.
- Read from the standard input.
cat exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.

The cat command can be piped into grep to find specific words in the file:cat file.txt | grep keyword output.txt

However all modern versions of grep have this built-in. Running a single command/process is more efficient, and so with large files will be noticably faster:grepkeyword file.txt output.txt

grep can also display an entire file, (like cat), by using the grep keyword "." which will match lines with at least 1 character. Alternatively the grep keyword "^" will match the beginning of every line including blank lines.
When grep is used to display multiple files, it will prepend each line of output with the filename:$ grep . *.txt

Examples:

Display a file:$ cat myfile.txt

Display all .txt files:$ cat *.txt

Concatenate two files:
$ cat File1.txt File2.txt > union.txt

If you need to combine two files but also eliminate duplicates, this can be done with sort unique: $ sort -u File1.txt File2.txt > unique_union.txt

Put the contents of a file into a variable$ my_variable=`cat File3.txt`

“To be nobody but yourself - in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you like everybody else - means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting” ~ E. E. Cummings